Now, [Jack] has to figure out how to do a two-hour show. Five nights a week. Which'll be no easy task: Having once co-hosted his old Rational Radio talk show -- for which the guests were Al B. Sure!, Bob Barker, Gennifer Flowers and Joe the Plumber -- let me say, Jack takes his odds-and-sods line-up very seriously.

"That's the big challenge," Jack says. "I don't just go in and talk on the mike while I'm jacking my cock. I research. I want to have as many eclectic guests as I do and be able to do that with less research."

According to Freeman, "The guy shows bad judgment, and I wouldn't put him on the air. Any personality who uses that language is not someone we want on the air." Jack's show has been pulled from the CNN 1190 Web site, where it was featured Tuesday evening.

Jack isn't buying Freeman's reason for dropping him before he even started.

"Homophobia rears its head all over the place," Jack tells Unfair Park. "It was a coup for me that I was getting in there. I would say to my friends, 'Come be on my show before they kick my ass off.' I was sure it would get kicked off for being too gay. It was going to be a very gay show. We were doing it for the gay community. And there is not a doubt in my mind that is what happened here. If I would have said 'one hand on my microphone and another hand playing with myself,' he would have found something else not to like."

Freeman says he didn't know the name Jack E. Jett till yesterday. Jack
isn't buying it: "I think he knows damned well who I am. And I think it
got back to him: 'We're putting that guy on the air?'" Apparently not. (I've been unable to reach Freeman since I spoke with Jack.)

"People
were questioning why Clear Channel was going to let someone as out as
me be on their air," Jack says. "And I think once the head honcho found out, he was
probably looking for any excuse he could. I don't believe that's the
reason their canceling the show. I don't for one minute believe that's
why. I think it's an excuse for his own homophobia. I think it only
just goes to cement in people's mind that's what Clear Channel does. He
tried to tell me they have Pride Radio, which is no more a gay radio
station than my grandmother's country-western radio station."

So, then, what now?

"I
plan on making a stink about it," Jack says. "That's probably the end of my radio
business here in Dallas, which is really sad."